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The TikTok Law and the Foreign Influence Boogeyman
TikTok’s curation algorithms can drive us crazy only in the ways we want to be crazy. -
The 9/11 Plea Deals Were the Only Way Out
The government’s withdrawal from the plea agreements in the 9/11 Case at Guantanamo ignores a reality that the parties are willing to accept. -
Lawfare Daily: Katie Moussouris on Bug Bounties
What is the role of bug bounties in cybersecurity? -
Lawfare Daily: Trump Trials and Tribulations Weekly Round-up (August 8, 2024)
Listen to this week's Trump's Trials and Tribulations. -
Learning from Islamic State-Khorasan Province’s Recent Plots
The organization's plans show a clear pattern. Policymakers should take note. -
The Week That Was: All of Lawfare in One Post
Your weekly summary of everything on the site. -
Algorithmic Surveillance Takes the Stage at the Paris Olympics
Exceptional situations require exceptional means, say French officials. Others claim the smart camera experiment poses privacy concerns. -
America’s Leaky Data Rattles the U.S. Intelligence Community
The latest edition of the Seriously Risky Business cybersecurity newsletter, now on Lawfare. -
Preserving Constitutional Democracy: A Tale of Two Lawyers
The contrast between actions of Former Attorney General William Barr and current ABA President Mary Smith illuminate the legal moment. -
Lawfare Daily: Big Tech and Law Enforcement, with Lukas Bundonis
Discussing the relationship between law enforcement and tech companies. -
First Circuit Highlights Role of U.S. Gunmakers in Border Crisis
The revival of the action brought by Mexico against American firearm giants signals a new path for lawsuits seeking to hold gun manufacturers liable. -
Rational Security: The “Exit, Pursued by a Bear Cub” Edition
This week, Alan Rozenshtein, Quinta Jurecic, and Scott Anderson were joined by co-host emeritus Benjamin Wittes to talk through the week's very big national security news stories. -
Governing Military Norm-Defiance in a Norm-Defying Presidency
The Uniform Code of Military Justice does not clearly limit disobedience of lawful orders from the president or secretary of defense. -
Lawfare Daily: Gen. Baker on the 9/11 Guilty Pleas that Were… Then Weren’t
What happened to the guilty plea deal reached with individuals charged with planning 9/11? -
Judge Cannon Should Have Stuck to the Beaten Path
Judge Cannon’s decision is undoubtedly skillful. But judges should be wary of blazing new trails. -
Lawfare Live: Trump's Trials and Tribulations, Aug. 8
Join the Lawfare team tomorrow for a discussion of the trials of Donald Trump. -
AI Will Displace American Workers—When, How, and To What Extent Is Less Certain
Policymakers have tools available to mitigate the resulting economic instability and insecurity, whenever and wherever it arises. -
Lawfare Daily: DOJ’s Arun Rao on Consumer Protection, Elder Fraud, and Privacy
How is the Justice Department thinking about generative AI? -
Oct. 7 Was an Intelligence Failure, Maybe of the U.S.
And there’s work to do. -
Tort Law Should Be the Centerpiece of AI Governance
The key advantage of liability is that it directly addresses the core policy problem of frontier AI.
More Articles
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‘Slaughter’-ing Humphrey’s Executor
The Supreme Court will decide whether to overturn long-standing precedent that protects independent agencies in Trump v. Slaughter. -
Rational Security: The “Don’t Upset the Masks” Edition
Scott Anderson, Benjamin Wittes, Kate Klonick, and Molly Roberts talked through the week’s big national security news stories. -
Authoritarian Soft Power
A review of Alexander Cooley and Alexander Dukalskis, “Dictating the Agenda: The Authoritarian Resurgence in World Politics” (Oxford University Press, 2025).